Armored vehicles patrolling the streets, reports of starvation looming and civilians killed - a small pro-Kurdish town of Silvan has become a hotspot after the Turkish military launched an operation on November 3. The curfew has entered its second week.

The city neighborhoods of Tekel, Mescit and Konak have been mostly hit by the shelling as journalists at the scene reported of shattered glass, debris in the streets and bullet-riddled buildings.

"Witnesses said the police had started shooting at the tea house out of the blue," said Omer Onen, the co-chair of HDP's Diyarbakir office, as cited by AFP. "There is no access to communication, people are at risk of starvation. They [Turkish military] didn't give us any permission to distribute food.”

HDP deputy Ziya Pir claimed an official from the Interior Ministry told them that the security forces “will erase three Silvan neighborhoods from the map,” as cited by Evrensel newspaper.

Several people have been killed since the curfew was launched in the city on November 3. AFP reported seven casualties, which included two civilians and a policeman. Local IMC news website said that a small boy was killed in the shelling.

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“You can be killed while drinking tea or while going to buy bread by snipers or police vehicles in Silvan,” another deputy from the HDP, Çaglar Demirel, said.

PKK is considered as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and NATO. In October, Ankara deployed armored vehicles and helicopters in Silvan. At least 17 PKK were killed as a result of the operation.

“If you look at the pictures from the town of Silvan now it looks as if you were looking at pictures from the town of Aleppo [Syria] or any other war-torn city in Syria,” Middle East political risk analysts Shwan Zulal told RT.

“If you look at the recent events in the past six months, since June’s election, the violence has escalated,” he said. “Obviously the president's party did not get the majority they wanted in June, and given the escalation of violence, and what happened a couple of weeks ago in the Turkish election, where the violence really paid off for the ruling AK party in Turkey.”